In Rewheel’s most recent version of its 4G pricing study which covers the first half of 2019, data shows that in countries with three MNOs (mobile network operators), the median price of 1GB of data is 113 percent higher than compared to a typical country with four MNOs.

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Graphic: Rewheel

Unfortunately, for us here in North America, things get even worse because while the U.S. is, essentially, a four MNO country (AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and Sprint), the median price for a gig of data comes out to about 4.5 euros, which is three times higher than the median for a typical four MNO country.

Graphic: Rewheel

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Meanwhile, for our neighbors to the north in Canada, prices are almost comically bad with the cost of a single gig of data going for 7.3 euros, compared to 2.9 euros for a typical three MNO country. Furthermore, the price of 4G data plans in Canada is 24 times more expensive than a similar plan in Europe, while the U.S. fared only slightly better with plans here rating 15 times more expensive. The only other country in the study with such anomalous data pricing is Japan which, like the U.S., suffers from data prices 15 times higher than the median prices for a four MNO European country.

Graphic: Rewheel

But perhaps the most telling metric is the cost of the least expensive data plan with at least 20GBs of data in the U.S. and Canada compared to what’s available in Europe. In Canada, the cheapest plan you can get with 20GB of data plan costs 67 euros, while in the U.S., that same plan costs about 36 euros. In either case, that’s at least double (or quadruple for Canada) the price of a typical European data plan.

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To bring this back home, as part of its merger plan (and to entice potential regulators), T-Mobile and Sprint have said that if a deal goes through, it will not raises the price of cell phone plans, including the price of 5G data when those new networks go live. However, with U.S data prices for 4G data already being significantly higher than what’s available in most European counties, that’s not exactly a huge comfort. And this what things look like now under a four MNO regime, and a not a three MNO system like the U.S. would have if a merger does get approved.

For a closer look at Rehweel’s data, feel free to click here and check out the full report yourself.